The board of Wilmar International Limited ( SGX:F34 ) has announced that it will pay a dividend of $0.11 per share on...
Paris wheat futures jumped on Monday to their highest since late January as adverse weather in parts of Europe and a Russian strike on a Ukrainian Black Sea port stoked supply concerns and prompted short-covering, dealers said. May milling wheat on Paris-based Euronext settled 4.4% up at 215.50 euros ($229.40) per metric ton, after earlier reaching its highest since Jan. 29 at 216.25 euros. Chicago wheat, a global benchmark, was up 4% in U.S. trading.
Paris wheat futures jumped on Monday to their highest since late January as adverse weather in parts of Europe and a Russian strike on a Ukrainian Black Sea port stoked supply concerns and prompted short-covering, dealers said. May milling wheat on Paris-based Euronext was up 4.0% at 214.75 euros ($228.58) per metric ton at 1458 GMT, after earlier reaching its highest since Jan. 29 at 216.25 euros. "The cold weather may hurt (EU crops) a little, the rain has faded from weather forecasts for southern Russia, and there's a squeeze on short positions in May futures."